The head of the Democratic National Committee on Sunday continued her party's all-out push for the Hispanic vote ahead of the November presidential election and tried to convince the minority group they should be afraid of what Mitt Romney would do.

Not every Republican pundit wants the head of Eric Fehrnstrom, the senior Romney adviser who kicked off a week of missteps for the campaign with the botched MSNBC interview in which he said the former Massachusetts governor doesn't think the individual mandate is a tax.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney battled through a tough primary campaign incessantly trying to prove himself conservative enough for the Republican electorate. But is he lovable? The answer, according to House Speaker John A. Boehner, is, well, it doesn't matter.

How good of a businessman is Herman Cain? Good enough to put up a 1-minute, 59-second editorial commentary on his new website criticizing President Obama's bailout of the U.S. automobile industry — in particular the administration's support of GM's flagship "green" car, the Chevy Volt — and still sell ad space on that same page for the electric hybrid.

Sounding the alarm on reports that presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney and the Republican National Committee raised more than $100 million last month, President Obama's campaign manager Jim Messina warned supporters that if they cannot keep up a similar fundraising pace then "it could cost us the election."

Friday's disappointing jobs report was barely off the presses before Crossroads GPS, the affiliate of the Karl Rove-funded Super PAC American Crossroads, announced a new ad campaign urging President Obama to address the national debt and stagnant economy.